Bacteria can begin translation before transcription has terminated.
Many non-bacterial cells are eukaryotic.
Breeds with it's own species.
Many non-bacterial cells are eukaryotic.
Bacteria have 70s ribosomes.Eukariyotes have 80s ribosomes
bacteria cannot remove eukaryotic introns; bacterial dna does not contain introns like eukaryotic genes do so they had to be removed before being added to the plasmid.
Bacterial cells are prokaryotic and the cells of an onion are eukaryotic.
they are different types of cells
Many non-bacterial cells are eukaryotic.
Whereas the prokaryotic translation occurs on seventy ribosomes, the eukaryotic translation occurs on 80 ribosomes. The prokaryotic translation is a continuous process while the eukaryotic is a discontinuous process.
most of the antibiotics kill or inactivate bacteria by inhibitting the protein synthesis... protein synthesis consists of 'transcription' and 'translation'.. the translation process requiers mRNA and ribosomes.Human(eukaryotic) ribosome is different from bacterial(prokaryotic) ribosome... Antibiotics inhibit the protein synthesis by altering the ribosomal constitution.Since human ribosomes are different from bacterial ribosome,the substances which are harmful to bacterial ribosome doesn't harm human ribosomes.. Thus human cells are immune to antibiotics..
The difference between Eukaryotic DNA and bacterial genome replication is the eukaryotic DNA is mostly linear and has multiple sites of replication. They both are bidirectional.
Whereas the prokaryotic translation occurs on seventy ribosomes, the eukaryotic translation occurs on 80 ribosomes. The prokaryotic translation is a continuous process while the eukaryotic is a discontinuous process.
Nuclei.
Bacteria are prokaryotes.
Bacterial cells are not eukaryotic cells, which means they do not have a nucleus. They do, however, have chromosome.
Breeds with it's own species.
No, bacterial cell membranes are phospholipid bi-layers as in eukaryotic cells.